Hailed as a “girl genius” by Oscar Wilde, Amy Levy (1861–89) received critical acclaim at the young age for her forthright poetry, and was the first Jewish woman to attend Cambridge. Despite her early success, as a Jew and New Woman, Levy faced many barriers that prevented her from being accepted by the greater Victorian society. Levy explored the grim reality of being an outsider in Victorian England in her short story “Sokratics in the Strand” published in 1884. I devoted my Masters Essay to call the attention of modern audiences to one of her often-neglected works; and to explore in my critical introduction how Levy’s lifetime status as an outsider resulted in the creation of one of her most emotionally wrought pieces of literature
My index and bibliography provides access to L.E.L.\u27s works in their original context. This use i...
Book review of a collection of essays about Sylvia Plath, looking at her work from biographical, cul...
This thesis investigates the cultural politics of a small group of women through their writing and ...
This thesis is a study of the work of Amy Levy, poet, novelist and essay writer who came to prominen...
This study explores the links between the life and the poetry of the late-Victorian feminist and wri...
This article examines the representation of the poet and novelist Amy Levy (1861–89) after her death...
This article explores the two ways in which Amy Levy experienced the cosmopolitan in Dresden, one as...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 85-87).On her death in January 1923, Katherine Mansfield...
While most scholars specialized in Amy Levy appear to agree that Amy Levy’s article “The Ghetto at F...
[eng] While most scholars specialized in Amy Levy appear to agree that Amy Levy's article 'The Ghett...
In 1838, at the age of 18, Mary Ann Evans was deep in her evangelical period, taking everything very...
Urban economies and the dead woman muse in the poetry of Amy Levy and Djuna Barne
currentBA Hons (British Columbia) MA (University of Nottingham) PhD (University of Nottingham) Fell...
My novel, Sudden Flight, envisages an alternative telling for the last few months in the life of the...
This thesis explores the effect produced when contemporary novelists write about fellow authors. Sin...
My index and bibliography provides access to L.E.L.\u27s works in their original context. This use i...
Book review of a collection of essays about Sylvia Plath, looking at her work from biographical, cul...
This thesis investigates the cultural politics of a small group of women through their writing and ...
This thesis is a study of the work of Amy Levy, poet, novelist and essay writer who came to prominen...
This study explores the links between the life and the poetry of the late-Victorian feminist and wri...
This article examines the representation of the poet and novelist Amy Levy (1861–89) after her death...
This article explores the two ways in which Amy Levy experienced the cosmopolitan in Dresden, one as...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 85-87).On her death in January 1923, Katherine Mansfield...
While most scholars specialized in Amy Levy appear to agree that Amy Levy’s article “The Ghetto at F...
[eng] While most scholars specialized in Amy Levy appear to agree that Amy Levy's article 'The Ghett...
In 1838, at the age of 18, Mary Ann Evans was deep in her evangelical period, taking everything very...
Urban economies and the dead woman muse in the poetry of Amy Levy and Djuna Barne
currentBA Hons (British Columbia) MA (University of Nottingham) PhD (University of Nottingham) Fell...
My novel, Sudden Flight, envisages an alternative telling for the last few months in the life of the...
This thesis explores the effect produced when contemporary novelists write about fellow authors. Sin...
My index and bibliography provides access to L.E.L.\u27s works in their original context. This use i...
Book review of a collection of essays about Sylvia Plath, looking at her work from biographical, cul...
This thesis investigates the cultural politics of a small group of women through their writing and ...